@@ -3626,30 +3626,21 @@ For more information, see [Deployments Safety](../environments/deployment_safety
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/merge_requests/19298) in GitLab 13.2.
`release` indicates that the job will create a [Release](../../user/project/releases/index.md),
and optionally include URLs for Release assets.
`release` indicates that the job creates a [Release](../../user/project/releases/index.md),
and optionally includes URLs for Release assets.
These methods are supported:
-[`name`](#releasename)
-[`description`](#releasedescription)
-[`tag_name`](#releasetag_name)
-[`ref`](#releaseref)
-[`milestones`](#releasemilestones)
-[`released_at`](#releasereleased_at)
-[`name`](#releasename)(optional)
-[`description`](#releasedescription)(optional)
-[`ref`](#releaseref)(optional)
-[`milestones`](#releasemilestones)(optional)
-[`released_at`](#releasereleased_at)(optional)
The Release is created only if the job processes without error. If the Rails API
returns an error during Release creation, the `release` job fails.
#### Tags
A `release` job should not be run against a tag commit, or it will continually re-trigger itself. This can be specified by including:
```yaml
only:
-tags
```
#### `release-cli` Docker image
The Docker image to use for the `release-cli` must be specified, using the following directive:
...
...
@@ -3674,23 +3665,25 @@ A pipeline can have multiple `release` jobs, for example:
```yaml
ios-release:
script:release > changelog.md
script:
-echo 'iOS release job'
release:
tag_name:v1.0.0-ios
description:changelog.md
description:'iOSreleasev1.0.0'
android-release:
script:release > changelog.md
script:
-echo 'Android release job'
release:
tag_name:v1.0.0-android
description:changelog.md
description:'Androidreleasev1.0.0'
```
#### `release:tag_name`
The `tag_name` must be specified. It can refer to an existing Git tag or can be specified by the user.
When the specified tag doesn't exist in repository, a new tag is created from the associated SHA of the pipeline.
When the specified tag doesn't exist in the repository, a new tag is created from the associated SHA of the pipeline.
For example, when creating a Release from a Git tag:
...
...
@@ -3699,8 +3692,6 @@ job:
release:
tag_name:$CI_COMMIT_TAG
description:changelog.txt
only:
-tags
```
It is also possible to create any unique tag, in which case `only: tags` is not mandatory.
...
...
@@ -3719,17 +3710,16 @@ job:
#### `release:name`
The Release name. This is an optional field. If omitted, it is populated with
`release:tag_name`.
The Release name. If omitted, it is populated with the value of `release: tag_name`.
#### `release:description`
Specifies a file containing the longer description of the Release. This is a mandatory
field and can point to a changelog.
Specifies the longer description of the Release.
#### `release:ref`
When the `tag_name` does not exist, `release:ref` specifies the commit to be used instead of the pipeline `ref`. If `tag_name` doesn’t exist, the release will be created from `ref`. `ref` can be a commit SHA, another tag name, or a branch name.
If the `release: tag_name` doesn’t exist yet, the release is created from `ref`.
`ref` can be a commit SHA, another tag name, or a branch name.
#### `release:milestones`
...
...
@@ -3737,36 +3727,64 @@ The title of each milestone the release is associated with.
#### `release:released_at`
The date when the release will be or was ready. Defaults to the current time. Expected in ISO 8601 format (2019-03-15T08:00:00Z).
The date and time when the release is ready. Defaults to the current date and time if not
defined. Expected in ISO 8601 format (2019-03-15T08:00:00Z).
#### Complete example for `release`
Combining the individual examples given above for `release`, we'd have the following code snippet:
Combining the individual examples given above for `release` results in the following
code snippets. There are two options, depending on how you generate the
tags. These options cannot be used together, so choose one:
```yaml
stages:
-build
-test
-release-stg
- To create a release when you push a Git tag, or when you add a Git tag
description:'Createdusingtherelease-cli$EXTRA_DESCRIPTION'# $EXTRA_DESCRIPTION and the tag_name
tag_name:'v${MAJOR}.${MINOR}.${REVISION}'# variables must be defined elsewhere
ref:'$CI_COMMIT_SHA'# in the pipeline.
milestones:
-'m1'
-'m2'
-'m3'
released_at:'2020-07-15T08:00:00Z'
```
released_at:'2020-07-15T08:00:00Z'# Optional, will auto generate if not defined,
# or can use a variable.
```
#### `releaser-cli` command line
...
...
@@ -3774,10 +3792,10 @@ The entries under the `:release` node are transformed into a `bash` command line
to the Docker container, which contains the [release-cli](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/release-cli).
You can also call the `release-cli` directly from a `script` entry.
The YAML described above would be transferred into a command line like this:
The YAML described above would be translated into a CLI command like this:
```shell
release-cli create --name"Release $CI_COMMIT_SHA"--description"Created using the release-cli $EXTRA_DESCRIPTION"--tag-name"release-$CI_COMMIT_SHA"--ref"$CI_COMMIT_SHA"--released-at"2020-07-15T08:00:00Z"--milestone"m1"--milestone"m2"--milestone"m3"
release-cli create --name"Release $CI_COMMIT_SHA"--description"Created using the release-cli $EXTRA_DESCRIPTION"--tag-name"v${MAJOR}.${MINOR}.${REVISION}"--ref"$CI_COMMIT_SHA"--released-at"2020-07-15T08:00:00Z"--milestone"m1"--milestone"m2"--milestone"m3"